Anxiety Relief
Manage anxiety in the moment with evidence-based grounding, breathing, and reframing techniques.
What it does
- Grounding Exercises - Anchor yourself to the present using sensory techniques
- Breathing Techniques - Activate your parasympathetic nervous system with structured patterns
- Thought Reframing - Challenge anxious thoughts with cognitive tools
- Anxiety Logging - Track patterns, triggers, and what helps over time
Usage
Quick Relief
Fastest tools when you need immediate calm.
- 4-7-8 breathing - 2 minutes, very effective
- 5-4-3-2-1 grounding - Engages all senses, breaks the cycle
- Box breathing - Military-grade calming technique
Breathing Exercises
Structured patterns that signal safety to your nervous system.
- Slow, deep breathing activates the vagus nerve
- Rhythm matters more than depth
- 5-10 minutes typical duration
Ground Me
Sensory anchoring to pull you out of anxious thoughts.
- Physical grounding (feet on floor, ice cube in hand)
- Sensory grounding (name what you see, hear, feel)
- Environmental grounding (movement, cold water)
Log Anxiety
Track episodes to identify patterns.
- When it started and what triggered it
- Intensity (1-10 scale)
- What helped and how long recovery took
- Physical symptoms (heart racing, sweating, tension)
Pattern Review
Weekly or monthly check-in to spot trends.
- Which techniques work best for you
- Common triggers and early warning signs
- Time of day, stress levels, sleep quality
- What reduces frequency over time
Techniques
4-7-8 Breathing
The most powerful single technique. Works in 2 minutes.
- Breathe in through your nose for 4 counts
- Hold for 7 counts
- Exhale through your mouth for 8 counts
- Repeat 4 cycles
Why it works: Extended exhale activates parasympathetic nervous system. Your body can't stay anxious when exhales are longer than inhales.
Box Breathing
Used by Navy SEALs and emergency responders.
- Breathe in for 4 counts
- Hold for 4 counts
- Breathe out for 4 counts
- Hold for 4 counts
- Repeat 5-10 cycles
Why it works: Perfect balance signals your nervous system that you're safe. Predictable rhythm is calming.
5-4-3-2-1 Grounding
Full sensory reset in 3-5 minutes.
Name 5 things you see, 4 things you can touch, 3 things you hear, 2 things you smell, 1 thing you taste.
Why it works: Floods your prefrontal cortex with sensory data, crowding out anxious thoughts. Forces present-moment awareness.
Body Scan
Progressive muscle relaxation to release tension.
- Start at your toes. Notice any tension without judgment.
- Move slowly up through your body: feet, legs, stomach, chest, arms, neck, head.
- Breathe into any tight areas. Consciously relax on exhale.
- Total time: 5-10 minutes
Why it works: Anxiety lives in your body. Scanning releases trapped tension and breaks the anxiety→tension→more anxiety loop.
Tips
-
Practice before you need it. Use these techniques when calm so your nervous system recognizes them as safe. Then they work instantly when anxiety hits.
-
Consistency beats intensity. 5 minutes daily is better than one 30-minute session. Build the habit so it's automatic when panic strikes.
-
Find your anchor. Different techniques work for different people. Try all of them, then pick 2-3 that feel most natural. Use those as your go-to toolkit.
-
Track what works. Not every technique helps every time. Log which one ended the episode and how long it took. Your own data is your best guide.
-
All data stays local on your machine. Your anxiety logs, triggers, and patterns never leave your device. No cloud sync, no third-party access.
If You're in Crisis
This skill is not a substitute for professional help.
- 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline) - Call or text 988 anytime, 24/7
- Text HOME to 741741 (Crisis Text Line) - Free crisis support via text
If you're having thoughts of self-harm, please reach out to one of these resources immediately.